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Why Chanda Prescod-Weinstein sees hope in cosmic curiosity

Kobo in Conversation

Release Date: 05/13/2026

Why Chanda Prescod-Weinstein sees hope in cosmic curiosity show art Why Chanda Prescod-Weinstein sees hope in cosmic curiosity

Kobo in Conversation

Nathan Maharaj spoke with physicist Chanda Prescod-Weinstein, author of the 2021 book , a highly personal reflection on the human and inherently flawed practice of scientific inquiry and her career as a Black Jewish scientist. Her new book is . In it she explains to readers, what's really going on with quantum cats? what does a light-swallowing black hole actually look like? what can we learn about quantum theory from the Afrofuturist jazz musician Sun Ra? —and a whole lot more.

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Nathan Maharaj spoke with Tara Gereaux, author of the novel and the novella Size of a Fist. Her new book is called . Set in 1946, it’s the story of Florence, or Mrs. Banks as she’s known down at Pratt’s Insurance, the company where she’s worked diligently for years. While out for lunch with her colleagues one day, Florence encounters a man whose mere presence threatens to upend the life she’s made for herself in the town of Torduvalle, Saskatchewan. 

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Michael Tamblyn spoke with Eliana Ramage, author of To the Moon and Back. It’s a novel about Steph, a young Cherokee woman who from the earliest age is obsessed with space and space travel, dreaming about one day becoming a NASA astronaut. 

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Kobo in Conversation

Hosts Michael Tamblyn and Nathan Maharaj caught up on the latest private equity-fueled mergers & acquisitions, what we're not talking about when we're talking about the money made from books, plus a whole lot more. This episode covers: Rosetta Books acquired by Open Road Media Why private equity is (still) interested in the book business, most recently in German companies Bookwire and Zebralution Independent Publishing Group's move to add more direct-to-consumer services for their publisher clients (and why becoming a bookseller is harder than it looks) The "dark matter"* that's not being...

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Nathan Maharaj spoke with physicist Chanda Prescod-Weinstein, author of the 2021 book The Disordered Cosmos, a highly personal reflection on the human and inherently flawed practice of scientific inquiry and her career as a Black Jewish scientist. Her new book is The Edge of Space-Time: Particles, Poetry, and the Cosmic Dream Boogie. In it she explains to readers, what's really going on with quantum cats? what does a light-swallowing black hole actually look like? what can we learn about quantum theory from the Afrofuturist jazz musician Sun Ra? —and a whole lot more.

Why Chanda Prescod-Weinstein sees hope in cosmic curiosity